Naval Sea Systems Command

1974 NAVSHIPS + NAVORD = Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA)

1966 BuShips = Naval Ships Systems Command (NAVSHIPS)
1966 BuOrd = Naval Ordinance Command (NAVORD)

1958 BuAer + BuOrd = Bureau of Naval Weapons (BuWeps)

1940 BuC&R + BuEng = Bureau of Ships (BuShips)

1921 Bureau of Steam Engineering (BuEng)
1921 Bureau of Aeronautics (BuAer)

1862 Bureau of Construction & Repairs (BuC&R)
1862 Bureau of Ordinance (BuOrd)

"The Naval Sea Systems Command is comprised of command staff, headquarters directorates, affiliated Program Executive Offices (PEOs) and numerous field activities. Together, we engineer, build, buy and maintain ships, submarines and combat systems that meet the Fleet's current and future operational requirements.

"Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) is the largest of the Navy's six system commands. With a fiscal year budget of approximately $36 billion, NAVSEA accounts for nearly one quarter of the Navy's entire budget.  With a force of 86,600 (as of 1 Aug 2022) civilian and military personnel, NAVSEA engineers, builds, buys and maintains the Navy's ships and submarines and their combat systems.  To accomplish this, NAVSEA manages 150 acquisition programs and manages foreign military sales cases that include billions of dollars in annual military sales to partner nations.

"The origin of NAVSEA dates to 1794, when Commodore John Barry was charged to oversee the construction of a 44-gun frigate and ensure that all business "harmonized and conformed" to the public's interest.  Today, the NAVSEA organization has 42 activities. NAVSEA strives to be an efficient provider of defense resources for the nation, and it plays an important role in the Navy Enterprise. As a Provider Command, it has the responsibility of directing resource sponsors into the proper mix of manpower and resources to properly equip the fleet.

"NAVSEA has the further responsibility of establishing and enforcing technical authority in combat system design and operation. These technical standards use the organization's technical expertise to ensure systems are engineered effectively, and that they operate safely and reliably."

from NAVSEA

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